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FILE - In this Oct. 30, 2017 file photo, Mila Kunis arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of “A Bad Moms Christmas.” Kunis has been named Woman of the Year by Harvard University’s Hasty Pudding Theatricals. She’ll be honored Jan. ... more >

Amira Weeks, the group’s student president, made the announcement Thursday afternoon at the start of a comedic roast celebrating actor Mila Kunis, who was named the organization’s Woman of the Year.

“The Hasty Pudding welcomes women to audition and to give equal opportunity to play those roles based on the quality of their individual talents,” Weeks said, reading from a letter from the organization’s governing board. “While we have great respect for the art form as it’s been presented by the Pudding for over 170 years, the world is in a very different place. We are very proud to take this organization forward as a leader in women’s rights and gender equality.”

Hasty Pudding is known for comedic revues that feature men in drag playing female characters, a longstanding tradition in the 223-year-old group.

But students and alumni have been calling on the troupe to change its casting policy in recent years.

Female students have even been auditioning for roles in protest over the years, but none were ever cast. Some also called on Kunis to reconsider accepting the award over the exclusion.

The 34-year-old actress, who has spoken out against sexism in the entertainment industry before, said in brief remarks onstage that she was “honored” to have been part of the program during its “year of change.”

Speaking with reporters after, Kunis noted that women are active in key behind-the-scenes roles at Hasty Pudding, including writing the shows, working on the technical crew and serving on the executive board, which is currently led by a woman and includes several other female members.

“Most of Hasty Pudding is women, they’re just not on stage,” she said. “This production has been forward thinking for many decades. It’s not a male-driven organization. It just happens that historically that most of performers on stage are men.”

Kunis said casting policy changes factored heavily into her decision to accept the honor.

“I wouldn’t be here otherwise,” she said. “It was something very important to me. This is something this program always wanted to do. It was something that was going to happen inevitably.”

Earlier in the day, Kunis was paraded through Harvard Square by college students dressed in drag while a handful of protesters held signs calling out the troupe for not including women performers.

Later, Kunis gamely played along while the student-actors roasted her onstage before handing her the prize of the event: a golden pudding pot.

Kunis at one point inhaled helium from a balloon and attempted to hawk Jim Beam, the bourbon that she serves as a spokeswoman for, in a squeaky voice.

She took part in a dance off with an actor dressed like a black swan, a nod to her Golden Globe-nominated turn in 2010’s “Black Swan.”

And she tried out a Boston accent as she gave a reading from “The Fighter,” a Massachusetts-based movie that starred Mark Wahlberg, her co-star in the comedy “Ted” and a Boston native.